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Home A-Clue

Facing the Fear of Otherness

by Dana Blankenhorn
April 2, 2010
in A-Clue, ADHD, business strategy, Current Affairs, economy, futurism, Health, history, Internet, investment, Personal, political philosophy, politics, The Age of Obama, Travel
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Think of this as Volume 14, Number 14 of A-Clue.com, the online newsletter I’ve written since 1997. Enjoy.


Chinese couples ballroom dancing blurry If you’ve never been to China it can be the most fearsome place imaginable. You think of communist drones, chained to machines by their slave masters, and you think of a government plotting our economic destruction.

That’s not China. (I know it’s horribly blurry, but these people are ballroom dancing in a park in Chengdu. We Tai Chi, they do the foxtrot.)

China is a far more complex place than you imagine. But this I know. Most of its 1.3 billion people are just like you and I. They want the same things for their children we do. They’re mainly just trying to get ahead.

Zhang yaqin in 1978 What they fear most, on the whole, is chaos. Chaos destroyed China throughout the last century, it took 100 years away. The chaos of the late 19th century, when China was carved up by Europe. The chaos of the warlord era, the chaos of Japanese occupation, the chaos of civil war, and the chaos Mao Zedong unleashed repeatedly, trying to beat the China-ness out of his people.

Chinese people, I learn, date the history of modern China to only 1978. In these 32 years they have built a great Industrial society, the dominant producer of goods on our planet. This has given hundreds of millions things they never dreamt of before. Cars. Refrigerators. Apartments in the sky and, for a lucky few, fabulous wealth.  (This is Zhang Yaqin in 1978. He is now global vice president for Microsoft, and heads its Chinese research group.)

What built China? Capitalism, we say. Order, they say. In fact is was both. Capitalism needs order just as liberty needs order. Our Constitution gives us Ordered Liberty, not “freedom.” It is a system under which we set the limits, and where we have the power to both enforce them and change them. But there are limits. Without law and order capitalism as a system can’t exist.

China’s government is many things. It is complex, it is opaque, it is bureaucratic, it is powerful. The one thing it’s not is communist. Chinese people have fewer guarantees of health care than we do. Everything is a competition. Getting more than a rudimentary education requires passing an ever-harder series of exams. The price of failure in anything is incredibly high. Everyone is a slave to the market, not the party, and the “oppression” we complain of there is the last thing from most minds.

But there’s another absolutely vital point you must know about China. They have many more problems than we do, much bigger problems, and most people there know it. There are tensions between the fast-developing coast and the interior. There are ethnic problems. There is pollution. There is the problem of an economy that must slow and a currency whose price must rise, and wherever its leaders turn lies the possibility of chaos large and small.

Xi_Jinping_VOA There is no doubt who has the better hand to play between Hu Jintao and Barack Obama. It’s Obama. It’s us. (To the left, Hu’s expected successor, Xi Jingping.)

It is this knowledge that needs to guide our hand.

We have an opportunity to turn today’s great competition into something both sides can win. We remain the stronger side. We can make concessions.

But concessions don’t matter unless they’re offered in a spirit of equal humanity. We need to learn more about each other — our governments, our elites, our media, our people. On both sides.

Wikipedia bouncywikilogo We need more honest translations of what Chinese are writing, and they need more honest dialogue from us. Both sides need to understand the needs of the long term, the need of our grandchildren to have a breathable atmosphere and drinkable water, and the need of China to evolve into a post-industrial society, not just an industrial one. 

The Internet is our secret weapon in that, and while we can protest China’s “great firewall,” is must be from an understanding that the effort is self-defeating on their part. The great challenges facing both sides require free inquiry, free minds and open hearts if they’re to be solved. And solutions can come from anywhere, from anyone. Building walls against possible solutions is building a wall against yourself.

We can be more open, and from that example so can they.

My point is the enemy in this case is not China. It’s not China’s government, not its people, not its businesses. The enemy is fear, our fear of them, their fear of us. It’s the same enemy I faced 35 years ago, the same fear my friend faces every day of his life.

Engagement is the victory. Isolation is the enemy.

Tags: Barack ObamaChinaChina governmentChina policyfearforeign policyObama Administrationpolitical fearTea Party
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Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn began his career as a financial journalist in 1978, began covering technology in 1982, and the Internet in 1985. He started one of the first Internet daily newsletters, the Interactive Age Daily, in 1994. He recently retired from InvestorPlace and lives in Atlanta, GA, preparing for his next great adventure. He's a graduate of Rice University (1977) and Northwestern's Medill School of Journalism (MSJ 1978). He's a native of Massapequa, NY.

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Comments 10

  1. DonnaUm says:
    15 years ago

    Typical liberal: immediately use the racist argument when people disagree.
    That sums up DanaL simple worldviews, and an almost militant unwillingness to start with the basic assumption that other people are decent, even if they hold different opinions. No – instead they’re “racist”, “evil”, “idiots”. Riiight…

    Reply
  2. DonnaUm says:
    15 years ago

    Typical liberal: immediately use the racist argument when people disagree.
    That sums up DanaL simple worldviews, and an almost militant unwillingness to start with the basic assumption that other people are decent, even if they hold different opinions. No – instead they’re “racist”, “evil”, “idiots”. Riiight…

    Reply
  3. Lennart9 says:
    15 years ago

    Liberal hate:
    http://www.pjtv.com/video/AlfonZo_Rachel_Presents%3A_ZoNation/Zo%E2%80%99s_Mailbag%3A_Hate-Filled_Liberal_Trolls_Edition/3334/

    Reply
  4. Lennart9 says:
    15 years ago

    Liberal hate:
    http://www.pjtv.com/video/AlfonZo_Rachel_Presents%3A_ZoNation/Zo%E2%80%99s_Mailbag%3A_Hate-Filled_Liberal_Trolls_Edition/3334/

    Reply
  5. DaveIdan says:
    15 years ago

    Well, diverting the attention to ‘eeeevilll’ China doesn’t cut it. We’ve got a democrat controlled legislature that is perfectly able to destroy the economy. Dana, control your anger, keep your mind open (I know.. it’s hard for you), and let the economic stats sink in:
    http://www.agoyandhisblog.com/2010/03/26/every-picture-tells-a-story-dont-it/
    And no: you can’t tax yourself out of poverty. So don’t go there.
    Hey, it’s an open blog 🙂
    Deal with it.

    Reply
  6. DaveIdan says:
    15 years ago

    Well, diverting the attention to ‘eeeevilll’ China doesn’t cut it. We’ve got a democrat controlled legislature that is perfectly able to destroy the economy. Dana, control your anger, keep your mind open (I know.. it’s hard for you), and let the economic stats sink in:
    http://www.agoyandhisblog.com/2010/03/26/every-picture-tells-a-story-dont-it/
    And no: you can’t tax yourself out of poverty. So don’t go there.
    Hey, it’s an open blog 🙂
    Deal with it.

    Reply
  7. Elizabeth Parsons says:
    15 years ago

    You just dont get it. It’s not fear that drives the so-called tea-party. It’s a huge smoldering anger of not being heard by the elected representatives who have decided to not represent the wish of those who put them there. Interesting poll yesterday…the majority of folks who call themselves ‘teapartiers’ are NOT republican or democratic. They are independents. And it’s the independents who will carry the next presidential election.

    Reply
  8. Elizabeth Parsons says:
    15 years ago

    You just dont get it. It’s not fear that drives the so-called tea-party. It’s a huge smoldering anger of not being heard by the elected representatives who have decided to not represent the wish of those who put them there. Interesting poll yesterday…the majority of folks who call themselves ‘teapartiers’ are NOT republican or democratic. They are independents. And it’s the independents who will carry the next presidential election.

    Reply
  9. Leanne Franson says:
    15 years ago

    Hmmm, I’m here from smartplanet: how to protect your copyright… I really don’t see all this “credit” you are giving for the images you use. You say “(This is an extract from a 2009 cartoon in The Times of London.)” but I don’t see the artist’s name anywhere and when I click it, I just get that image on an otherwise blank webpage. How about all the other images here? I assume, like The Times of London, you commissioned them and paid for them??

    Reply
  10. Leanne Franson says:
    15 years ago

    Hmmm, I’m here from smartplanet: how to protect your copyright… I really don’t see all this “credit” you are giving for the images you use. You say “(This is an extract from a 2009 cartoon in The Times of London.)” but I don’t see the artist’s name anywhere and when I click it, I just get that image on an otherwise blank webpage. How about all the other images here? I assume, like The Times of London, you commissioned them and paid for them??

    Reply

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I'm Dana Blankenhorn. I have covered the Internet as a reporter since 1983. I've been a professional business reporter since 1978, and a writer all my life.

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